Appeal to Consequences: Difference between revisions

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{{tropeUseful Notes}}
=== '''[[wikipedia:Appeal to consequences|Appeal To Consequences]]''': ===
:: The truth or falsity of a statement is decided by the positive or negative consequences of it.
 
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:: Ain't it fun when you can use the same fallacy and essentially the same argument and "prove" diametrically opposite conclusions?
 
When the consequences are that the person making the appeal threatens bodily harm to the other person, that's ''argumentum ad baculum'', which we call [[Appeal to Force]].
 
{{examples}}
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** Likewise, evolution is often claimed by creationists to have all sorts of horrible consequences if true, quickly summed up as "If we're descended from monkeys, then we will act like monkeys." Besides most of these negative consequences being false or irrelevant (If humans are apes, then to act 'like an ape' does not preclude acting like a human), the desirability of common ancestry has nothing to do with it's truth value.
 
==== Looks like this fallacy but isn't ====
* When the question isn't about the truth or falsity of a statement, but is instead about whether or not to follow a particular course of action.